Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 November 1894 — Page 7
. MARTHA WASHINGTON I COOK-BOOK
FREE!
320 PACES. ILLUSTRATED. One of the best Cook* Tooks published. It contains recipes for all kinds of cooking. Also depart.
Medicine, Kli-
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juette, and Toilet reci
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In Eichaiiffe for 20 LARGE LIOIT HEADS cut from Lion Coffee wrappers and a 2-cent fltaxnp. Write for list of our other Fine Premiums. Wo have many valuable Picture-, aho a Knife, io .- .c, ltr„ to pivo away. A beautiful Picture fun! Is in every package of Lion' Cotli: iooisfli SPICE CO,
The Wav to Get There! W*
Nashville, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Knoxville, Tenn. Chattanooga, Tenn Harrogate, Tenn. Decatur, Ala. lUrmingham, Ala. Montgomery, Ala. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans, La. Atlanta, Ca. Augusta. Ca. Macon, Ga. Savannah, Ca. ThomasviMe, Ca. Columbia, S. C. Charleston, S. C. Asheville, N. C. Censacola, Fla. St. Augustine. Fla. Jacksonville, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Texas Points. Arkansas Points.
■
BUY TiCKETS OVEH THE
w 4 .
IS PJM THE DEBT.
Democratic State Government Saving the People Interest.
Nearly a Million Dollari Paid In the Past Eighteen Months —Taxpayers Saved a Large Sum by the Early Payment of the Honda—Another Testimonial to the I'eiieflts of Democratic Government. Tho other day the Indianapolis Sentinel hail the following interview with State Auditor Henderson which cannot fail to prove of deep interest to every taxpayer in the state of Indiana: “I have just mailed letters to Now York holders of Indiana securities that on Nov. 1—now only two weeks off—the finance board of the state will redeem
1200,000 of bonds that are not payable I
until March 1, 1895, but on which the state now has the option of paying.” “What do you mean by the finance
board?"
“The finance board is composed of the govern >r, treasurer and auditor of state, into whose hands the fiscal affairs of the state are committed." “Why are you going to redeem bonds not yet due.” “Because we have the money on hand to do it with, and because by so doing we will save the state interest at the rate of 3 1 ., per cent or £7,000 annually. Nor is this all. On Jan. 1 we shall he able to take up £300,000 more of those option 3'^ per cent bonds, thereby saving the state about £5,000 in interest alone—a tidy sum—as well as reducing the public debt very sensibly." “How much of the public debt lias been paid by the present state adminis-
tration?"
“With this £200,000 payment the aggregate liquidation will be £910,000— and all within one year and a half. In-
ly in wagis* and will shortly increase their payrolls. There is an increase in the mumber of men engaged at Frankton. MORE MEN AT ANDERSON.
NEW FACTORIES A Nil ENLARGEMENTS WHICH WILL EWFLOT SZTEB\t. HUNDRED MEN. Anderson, Ind., Oct. 13.—The Buckeye Manufacturing company will put 250 men at work Nov. 1 and 100 more
Dm. i.
The Riverside agricultural implement works, to employ i50 men, will be completed and in operation by Feb. 1. Many new gas wells are being drilled. The plant of the Mather tinplate works, to employ 800 hands, will be com-
pleted in a few weeks.
Work has begun on the duplicate plant of the Wright Shovel company. It
will employ 125 men.
The Raub locomotive works, to employ 5,000 men, will probably be located
| at Anderson.
Munite, Ind., Oct. 13.—Within 30
FROUDE IS DEAD.
This line runs double dnily i morning and evening departure 1 trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis to the principal Southern cities. . This line affords two routes to points in the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double daily sleeping car service to Jacksonville, and the only through line of sleepers to Thomasville. This line lias three daily trains to points in the Southeast. The passenger equipment of this Kne is not excelled in the South.
I* Full information cheerfully furnished upon application to GEO. L CROSS. N. W. Pass. Agt., - CHICAGO, ILL. C. P. ATM0RE, Gen'l Pass. Agt., LOUISVILLE, KY,
W. L. Douglas ISTHEBEST. nWCi flO SQUEAKING. $5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALF s 4 *3. s -° fine calf& kangaroi ! » 3.5° P0LICE.3 Soles. , *2.*l. 7 _s Boys'SchoolShoes. % -LADIES4 SEND FOR CATALOGUE W* L.* DOUGLAS , BROCKTON, MASS. You can save monry by piirckiiMiug \V. L. Dougin* Shoe*, Because, we are the largest manufacturers of advertised shoes in the world, aud guarantee the value by stamping the name ana price on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prices for the value given than any other make. Take no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. Sold by P. R. CHRISTIE.
days the work of rebuilding the mammoth Whitely reaper works, burned down some mouths ago, will begin. When the works are rebuilt they will give employment to a much larger num-
ber of men than before.
Kokomo, Ind., Oct. 13.—The industrial situation in this city is improving, and there are good grounds for encouragement, Many of the large factories throughout the city are increasing their working forces, and in many raises the improvement of present facilities is made necessary by the recent revival. The Diamond Plategloss company now employs 000 men and improvements are being made which will result in the employment of a large additional force. The canning factories have packed about 4,000,000 cans this season, as
against 2,000,000 last year.
The United States goblet and tumbler works at Greentown announce that next season the working force of the concern will be more than doubled. About 300 men are now employed. Converse has secured the location of a i large tinplate mill, work on which will
Great flUtortan and Religious Writer
I’ami'A Away at London.
Loir DON, Oct 22.—James Anthony Froude, LL. D., the celebrated religious writer and historian, died at 0:30 a. m. Saturday, aged 70 years. [James Anthony Froude, LL I)., youngest son of the late venerable K. H. Froude. arch- * deacon of Totnes. was born at Darlington. Devonshire. April 23. 1818. was educated at Westminster and at Oriel college. Oxford, ! where he was graduated in 1840. In 1842 he became a fellow of Exeter college. He was ordained a deacon in the (’hurch of England in I 1“44. His theological writings were condemned ! by the university authorities and ho accepted ' an appointment which he hau received to a !
teachership In Tasmania.
It was In 1858 that he published the first two volumes of his "History of England From the Full of Wolsey to the Defeat of the Spanish j Armada." The twelfth and final volume appeared in 1870 In the autumn of 1*72 Mr j Froude visited the United States and de- | liverod a series of lectures on the relations oetween Great Britain and Ireland, taking the position that the Irish were themselves to blame for a large proportion of the difficulties iu which their country has been involved. because of their own internal Jealousies During the last year of his life, he devoted most of his time and attention to the writing of books, acting as the editor of several magazines. His health bad been gradually failing until ho was able to move about his house and garden no longer ]
and all women who are nursing babies, derive almost inconceivable benefits from the nourishing properties of
deed, the January payment of $.)()0,0()0 j a t onoe, and it is expected the will also be made within one year and pimn will be in operation bv tin* first of three-quarters-—making a total bowd!|j ie Several hundred men will lie
debt extinguishment of nearly ^,025,000 ^j ven (»niployment.
1 A Fihs Natural Chew.
within less than two years. This is a record that >,'e are all proud of, eclipsing as it does the performance of any previous administration in the history of the
state.”
“How does it happen that yon are now reducing the public debt at the rate of more than £500,000 annually, while the public d< bt actually increased under
previous administrations?”
“That is simply and easily accounted for. It is all fine to the new tax law, which our Republican friends so solemnly denounce in their effort to hoodwink the plain people. Under the old tax law the public debt was increasing annually at the rate of from £500,000 to £1,0(10,000 per year. The state was compelled to borrow money every year with which to moot the interest debt of the commonwealth. Why, one of th“ first acts I was called upon to discharge as a start" member of the board of finance was to 1 borrow £300,000 to pay interest on the public debt ..ml to issue £340,000 of new bonds to fund an old issue then matured. The state then—in 1891 —had ‘hard sledding’ to meet the ordinary expenses of the state government and, counting interest on the public debt, we were running behind from £500,000 to £1,000,-
000 annuallv.
The public debt then—Oct. 31, 18',)l— aggregated f 8,830,1! 15.12 of which £484,000 was domestic. The legislature of 1891 was confronted with this vexed problem, and it had the wisdom and courage to enact the new law, under whose operation the scales have been turned, so that instead of piling up the public debt enormously every year we are enabled to reduce it more than half a million annually besides meeting every requirement of the state government. Nor is Ibis debt reduction of £910,000 since April, 1893, all that has been accomplished. We have saved the state by the refunding law of 1889 £120,913 in annual interest charges, to which must be added the interest saved on bond payments of nearly £30,000 annually, or a total saved on interest alone of £155,000. This is a record of which we are justly and pardonably proud and on which the taxpayers of Indiana may congratulate
themselves.”
Weak Mothers j
t Scott’s Emulsion \ % This is the most nourishing food known to science. It on- f $ riches the mother’s milk and gives her strength. It also % makes babies fat and gives more nourishment to growing
▼ children than all the rest of the food they eat. Scott s hmulsion lias been prescribed by physicians for
V twenty years for Rickets, Marasmus, Wasting Dhsases cf Children,
▼ Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs, Emaciation and Consumption, W Send for pamphlet mi Scott's Emulsion. FUEL.
q Scott &. Bowne, N. Y. All Dru-gists. 50 cent’s ana! SI.
<o 'U£> <u.> <?►
BADLY SHAKLN UP.
leidlanapcSis^usinessUnr/ersi I ).< n llrif Colic?*-»f Hu*I<u>a« und MiortliuiLd. Brrant <k Htratton. Established l'-'> . When Block. Elevn.n-. Vv i.known. SUantiotiH Our ondorKement pRn«i>ort to b©«t pobifiou*. Enter now I'ngy pa\’nor in. Individual U;8truclu>a. t hcuu o-urdiuc. Uouuliiui C’atuioaue and taper Iruc Add re** H6EBAOSR T”**.
Mother F.arth IimIuIkch In a Shiver on the
Pacftfle Coast.
San Francisco, Oct. 24.—Despatches received In this city Tuesday evening j show that southern California was
NOTHING TO OFFER.
llucldeu's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in t he world for Cut*, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores. Tetter, f’happc'l Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruption*, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money re-
Price 25 ceuls per box. For sale by
lyftl
Republicans Mean Only to Tear Down,
shaken by several earthquake shocks| Nut to ,lu "' 1 1 *’• shortly after 3 o’clock Tuesday after-1 One of the prize puzzles of this cam-
noon. At Los Angeles they were light P^i i* what the Republicans intend to Albert Alien* ^ ^ *° r
and scarcely noticed, but at Oceanside, j Bi the event of a Republican victory. 8anta Ana, San Diego and other places ! Benjamin Harrison doesn’t say. Methe troubles were more severe and i Kiuley is trotting around the country drove people from the large buildings < declaring that it moans the restoration
of the law which bears his name—a law which closed down every factory in .lie land, lowered the price of all farm products and increased the cost of every manufactured article used by civilized man. John Sherman lifts his weatherbeaten voice to state that Republican
victory means a
gle gold standard of monev, with the j. 8. DowiinK, Axt.
into the streets. Windows were broken and clocks stopped at Man Diego, and a telephone message received there from Campo, a small town on the Mexican border f>5 miles efcst, se.ys the shocks were very severe, but the damage was not serious. Seismic disturbances were heaviest at San Juan Capistrano, where, besides the breaking of windows. crockery of all descriptions was shattered in many houses, and the old mission bells tolled in low tones. The vibrations were from northeast to southwest, and each shock was of
about a minute’s duration.
Brazil, ind., Oct. 13.—The outlook for the future of the manufacturing in terests of this city are at present more encouraging than at any time for sev
end months past.
The Brazil Brick and Pipe company is now working full time, with a slightly
increased force of men.
Fairmount, Ind., Oct. 13.—The Enterprise furniture factory is now in op
eratioii with a full force.
The King City Glass company will start as soon as the repairs on buildings
and furnaces are completed.
The Big Four windowglass factory started bust week with a full force of 100
men.
The Fairmount Gloss company, man nfacturcrs of miscellaneous wares, will start its factory some time this week About 100 men will he employed at the
art.
J. E. Scroggy, an eastern capitalist, is in Anders®n figuring on a location for a shoe factory. He would furnish employ-
ment to 75 men.
The Fowler bolt works at Anderson, which have been shut down for two years, resumed operation Monday with
a full force of hands.
The Union Windowglass company at Anderson put its plant in operation the first of the week. One hundred and fifty men are employed. .
Rev. Covert will arrive in the city t " ill remain for him to determine as to
Monday morning from Buffalo to meet, it* publicity.
Anderson real estate men. lb- will sub- 1 mit propositions for the location of the
Raub locomotive works, which he rep- 1 Many Houses Demolished and Several I*erresents, which will in two years employ i sons Injured. 3,000 men, and eventually fully 5,000. j Winfield, Kan., Oct. 28.—This city At Summitville, a manufacturing surrounding country was visited
THE STRIKE COMMISSION. It Recoilvenos to InventIgate the L»te
Labor Troubles.
Washington, Oct. 24.—The national strike commission appointed by the president to investigate the strike at Chicago reconvened Tuesday in the office of Commissioner of Labor Wright. After the last meeting the members of the commissipn went to their homes to prepare subdivisions of the report to be presented. This has been largely completed and the commission is now engaged iu giving final shape to the report to the president It is said tfiat tlie important rulings recently made by Justice Harlan of the United States supreme court in the Jenkins injunction case are in line with the conclusions drawn from the Chicago outbreak as to the rights and limitations of strikers. The report will be submitted to President Cleveland soon after he returns and it
FURIOUS GALE IN KANSAS.
Big Four Excursions to Hot
Springs, Ark.
Account Medical Association, we will sell tickets to Hot Springs. Nov. 18, 19 and 20\vith
return limit Nov. 30, at half*fare.
F. P. Huestis, Agt.
Home Seekers Excursions.
The Vamlalia Line will run two excursions to points in Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, New Mexico and Texas, rate one fare for the round trip plus $-2.00. The dates for these excursions are Oct. 23, and November 6, and this will be the last opportunity
,.f r'„. sill of the season to visi t the West at a very low rt St oration Of the hill raU . h - or f llr ,h er particulars call or write
resultant transfer of control of the treasury to the bondholders. Senator Cullom is prancing up and down the prairies of Illinois loudly vociferating i the pledge that the Republicans will let | the Democratic tariff law stand. Naturally enough, people are puzzled to know what the future has in store for them in the event of Republican 'access. Some of them have been asking the Indianapolis Journal, the organ of the Indiana Republicans and first fiddle of the Harrisyu boomlet, what they may expect. And here is The Journal’s an-
swer:
“As there is no possibility of the Republican party gaining control of all three branches of the government before March 4, 1897, it is not necessary to formulate any plan of remedial legislation at present.” Was ever sneh a confession made lwfore? Here is the Republican organ and the special spokesman of Harrison admitting that the party has not any fixed principles, any definite plan. It has nothing to offer, no hope to hold nut. Its object is to be merely a destroyer, not a builder. It is purely anarchistic, only desiring to wipe out the existing order of things, leaving chaos behind and trusting to chance to bring soim order out of this chaos inter on. T is the theory of the materialist. It promises death for a certainty and gives no hope of life hereafter. INTERNAL STRIFE.
Repub.ican Doctrine. “I can not find myself in full sympathy with this demand for cheaper coats, which, it seems to me, neceasarily involves a cheaper man or woman under the, coats.”— Ex-Prest. Benjamin Harrison. ‘‘Cheap! I never liked the word, cheap and nasty go together. This whole system of cheap things is a badge of poverty, cheap merchandise means cheap men, and cheat* men means a cheap country, and that is not the kind our fathers builded.”— William McKinley, father of His Bill.
if .1IL H A r TIME-TA11 LI.' BIG FOUR.
2:50 a. m. i 8 42 H. lit. 1:52 p. m 4:35 p. m. 5:50 p. m.
tNo. 14, Night Express * “ *2, Ind’n’lis Arcomniodatiu * “ 18, S. W. Limited <* ‘‘ 8, Mail... * “ 10, Knickerbacker Speaial..
\V 1ST.
No. 7, Night Express 12:22 a. m. ^ “ 11, K mckerbacker Special 12:58 a. in.
I, Mail
* “ 17, S. W. Limited 12:49 p. mr f “ ?, Terre Haute Accomodation. 6:15 p. ra. Daily. tDailv except Sunday. Train 14 hauls sleepers St. Louis to Boston and Columbus, sleeper and coaches to Cincinnati. No. 2 connects for Chicago, Cincinnati and Michigan division points. No. in hauls sleeper for Washington. D. C., via C. A O., sleeper for New York and connects for | Columbus, O. No 8 connects for Cincinnati and for Michigan division points to Wabash. No. 10, *• K nickt-rhocker Special,” sleepers for N. Y. Nos. 7, 11, 9 and 17 connect in Union Depot, St. Louis, with Western roads No. connects at Paris with Cairo division for points south and at Mattoon with I. C. for Hoints north. Effective Sept.30. F. P. HUESTIS, Agt
1 man
town north of Anderson, every house is filled, every plant running and all of the
GOO factory men are at work.
A Phenomenal lleenrd.
THESE DEMOCRATIC TIMES. MORE REPUBLICAN TESTIMONY AS TO THE BUSINESS REVIVAL.
Factories Continue to Resume, Titus Furnlahliig a Refutation of the Republican Calamity Howl—The Phenomenal Record of Resumption Under the New
Tariff Law.
The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, the strongest Republican newspaper in the west, continues to testify to the phenomenal improvement in business in Indiana und ,j r tbe influence of the new tariff law. Its news columns continue to give the lie to all the calamity howling of the Republican orators, whose only stock in trade it is. Under the
headlines
AGREEABLY SURPRISED. TINPLATE WORKERS WILL NOT GET AN EXPECTED REDUCTION.
Commercial - Gazette’s reports show that since Sept. 1, under the benign influence of the new tariff law, 1 Hi factories have resumed operations in Indiana, giving employment to 28,542 men. This does not take into account the smaller factories, nor does it include the number of men who have gone to work in factories which were only partially idle. These would swell the total of men who have secured work in the past six weeks in the factories to over 100. 000. Many of these hail been idle for two years lx*eause of the blight put upon manufacturing by the McKinley law. THREE VIEWS OF THE A. P. A. A. S«t F..r I It In the Fl.it farm, of the
Parties.
DEMOCRATIC UKPUBI.ICAN | POPULIST I-I.ATHIMM. PLATEOUM.I PLATFORM.
We believe and declare that the 1 policy and prin-j elides of what isj railed the Airer-j lean Protector Association nre| illiberal, iinvi ise.i unpatriotic, undemocratic and unainerieaii. Ini
the spirit of that religious free-)
a 1, ill I W)1 I> <
ci.’ LOUISVIUt. WtR AlBAFY & CHICAGO ffY CO. 3 \ Goinf? North—1:20 a. m., 12:05 p. m.; local,
1?’05 p, *>i.
Going South—2:17 a. ra., 2:22 p. m.; local,
1:45 p. m.
J. A. MICHAEL, Agent.
VANDALIA LINE. In effect Sept. 30,1H91. I rains leave Ureencas-
tle, Ind.,
FOR THB WEST.
No. 21, Daily U.IO p. m., for St. Louts.
“ 1, Daily 12:53 p.m., “ “ 7, Daily 12:2(1 a. m., “ “ 6, Kx. Sun 8:58 a. m., ‘ O 1 r. s p m ‘ Trains leave Terre Haute, No. 75, Kx. Sun 7:05 a. in., ‘ 77, Ex. Sun 8:55 p.m., ‘
FOR THE EAST.
No. 20. Daily 1:40 p. ni.. for Indianapolis. “ 8, Dally 3:35 p m., “ 8, Daily 3:32 a. m., “ “ 12, Daily 2:28 a. m., “ “ “ 2, Ex. Sun 8:20 p. m., “ “ 4, Ex. Sun 8:84 a. m., “ “ For complete Time Card, Kivinx Rll trains and stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J 8. DOWLING, Agent,
Greencastle, Ind.
Or W. F Brunner, Astt. Gen. F Iss. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
dom which char-j ac tc r 1 zcs oui, const i t u 11 oi. si and laws, iind| the spirit of mat wise toleration a n d generous statesm ansh i p which seeks ti accord to ail tin right and privi leges of Ameri can citizenship.
A NUMBER OF NEW ENTERPRISES OF LARG F. we .rail u p o n
PROPORTIONS AT ANDERSON.
PAYROLLS
INCREASING
WOOD.
AT EL
every man to dc i
battle
such
/.at Ion.
against
in organl-
by a destructive windstorm Sunday night. Many buildings were injured or totally demolished. Edward Welter and family were burled in a cellar under the ruins of their farmhouse fourteen hours, but were rescued alive. Ten houses were blown down in Liueda Springs, 18 miles south of here, including two hotels and a mill. A number of persons were injured, but no loss of life is reported. ToNt Ottlcn MuH«‘um Opeu, \Y ariiinuton, Oct. 28.—The post office museum has been thrown open to the public. The preparation of the exhibit has been under the direction of Chief Clerk Thomas, of the post office department Thp museum inelmlesall that was in the post office exhibit at the world’s fair and some additional features. Killed 11 ih Wlff'a Slanderer. Fort Worth, Tex., Oct 24.—At Honey Springs, in Dallas county, Mon day night, Will Hammond and Zip Bullard, young farmers, fought an impromptu duel. Hammond was shot to death and Bullard was seriously wounded. Bullard heard that Hammond had slandered his (llullard's)
wife.
Terre ITaute.
Peoria. Decatur.
The Commercial-Gazette has these bits
of news:
Elwood, Ind., Oct. 13.—The situation in this city relative to labor and the industries continues to grow brighter every day. The American tinplate factory is running full time without the ex-
pected cut in wages.
Edwin Stevens of Cincinnati and L.
L. Morris of Hammond will erect tin- i.mt two weeks Yestordnv Abner plate mills at Tipton to employ 300 ^ r 7 ,™,.
hands.
■’ig to give
Noneconld
Who dare now say that the Democratic party has not made good its historic claim of being the party always opposed to religions persecution against
whatever creed?
The McKinley Panic.
The senate tariff bill has been in oper
Wen ton Again Walking. NewbuBQ, N. ■ Y.. Oct 23.—Edward Payson Weston, the old-time pedestrian, started Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock from the "Square” in Water street on his 490-inilc tramp through the state. He was accompanied by Gustave Meyers aud Mr. Suokett, who
rode in a wagon. 4 Ictiin of Apoplexy.
Detroit, 'Meh., Oct. 24.—( apt. Henry A. Ford, an educator and newspaper writer of state reputation, fell dead
One Little Girl in the Slums: Wot yer say she died off The Other One: Eating a tuppenny ice on the top of ’ot pudden'. The First-Mentioned: Lor! what a jolly death.
Thousands of Women Buffer untold miseries from a sense of delicacy they cannot overcome. BRADFIELD’S hj t0 Female Regulator, ACTS AS fl SPECIFIC. It causes health to bloom, and Joy to reign throughout the frame. It Never Fails to Cure.
Th»» flow Itotw<M*n Ketcham ami Ootrilj
Hoe* Merrily On.
The Republican camp is being torn by internal dissensions. The Harrison-Gowdy-Journal crowd never did like William A. Ketcham, the candidate for attorney general. The beginning of dislike dates back to the time when Ketcham filed a law brief charging Harrison with selling out a client. The Journal people also had some sort of grievance against Ketcham and fought his nomination vigorously, threatening even to bolt it if made. Bnt they didn’t However, there was no purpose on the part of Harrison, or the Journal, or the committee which is controlled by them to permit Ketcham to become prominent. He i.i an aggressive, bold lighter who never knows when he is whipped and has ever been in outspoken opposition to Harr ison. It was quickly recognized that if he came well to the front he would prove a formidable foe to the future presidential hopes <>f Harris: di. So from tne first the machine began to knife him. At the outset he was compelled to pay a £3.500 assessment, though the salary of the office to which he aspires is but £2,500. Then a systematic series of snubs was put upon him. His
dates for speaking at large cities were | •treet.
canceled and his meetings in small towns were uiiadvertised, so that he had no crowds Then the committee threatened to leave his name off the ticket when it was certified to the election commissioners. But this was not done. Now Ketcham is running his own campaign, regardless of the committee, as Hovey did in 1888 and Chase in 1892. The committee is knifing him whomever it can without hurting the whole ticket, and there is some reason to believe that his friends are doing a little cutting iu retaliation themselves. Since grass growing has become a science and an art you may hire a
man to create a lawn for you in a dfth |
Mr wlfo ha* been under treatment of
i l* pb:
tit. After i
lendini
een
jhyfilclM ns three yen
siriu t hree hottlei I'ftiilator she
cooking. mURlnu didI wnMilng N. S. BKYAN, Henderson, Ala.
. without bene* f Hi »«iflel<r*
I- entitle Keiculator she run do her own
BBADFItXD KEGITATOU CO., Atlanta, (J». Hold by drii*ifUU nt #1.00 per bottle.
$5.00 an'l $2.50 in Prizes. The Central National Bank will award two prizes, one of|'» for the best *20 ears of corn and f2 50 for the next best 20 ears of corn brought to the bank and placed on exhibition there. Corn must be brought in on or before Saturday, Nov. 17, 1894. Three disinterested judges will he selected to make the award. Corn exhibited becomes the property of the btnk. tf
X(ftice uf Arfininittfratioii' Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam county, State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Graves, late of Putnam county, Indiana,
deceased.
Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 12th clav of October. 1X91. DOUGLAS HUFFMAN,
Administrator.
H. H. Mathias. Atty. 3t27 O. A7VT. JE*OOTL,TD % —Physician and Surgeon. Office, Rooms 2, 3, 4 and 5, Allen Block, East Washington street; residence, 13 Dloouuingt mu
if
ROASTED COFFEE,
The best article in town. Also the fullest stouk of
Tuesday morning on Woodward ave-jof the time once thought necessary
Boggs hunted Kokomo over for carpcii
Work has begun on a new fumitmn' t^rs, to wh-m he w willing to gi factory to employ 100 men. einploynKiit at good wages. Nonocon Tho McBeth lamp chimney works an* b® round. 1 In* panic of in.M was under employing TOO men and the McCIay McKinley law.—Kokomo Dispatch. Child labor has been abolished at the ^ , Diamond plateglass works. | The Democratic party under the leadThe Elwood steam forge works are ership of Jefferson purchased Louisiana employing 50 additional high grade in 1803. But now there is a new pujmechanics. chase and sale. This time the RepubKtarkey Bros, have located a vitrified lican party has purchased a portion of
nue while about to board a car. Apoplexy was the cause. Hope Abandoned. St. Johns, N. F., Oct. 24.—The Peary expedition steamer Falcon, from Philadelphia for this port, is now twenty days out and is twelve days overdue. It is feared that she will never bo
heard from.
Sixteen Women Drowned.
Madrid, Oct. 20.—Twenty women who were unloading the steamer Sep-
for such a creation. Thick and luxur- j ious lawns are produced between spring and autumn, and a lawn of two years under the modern forcing proc-1 ess may easily rival one of five years under the old-fashioned system. I Artificial stimulant and abundant water are reponsible for the new
order of things.
And
A llle-Failure.
Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 24.—The run on the discretionary pools continues,
paving brick factory to employ KX) men. the state with a sugar bounty.—Muncie George M. Irwin i o., one of the prinElwood factories pav out £85,000 week- Herald. \ cipal concerns, suspended yesterday,
' with liabilities of over £1,000,000.
Pure blood is absolutely necessary in order j to enjoy perfect health. Hood's Sarsaparilla
terabre. in Hilboa Friday, were thrown purities the blood and strenzchens the sys-:
from the dock in some unknown man- tem. ner, and sixteen of them were
drowned.
LWEIK&CO.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for
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